Richard Olney and His Public ServiceHoughton Mifflin, 1923 - 335 Seiten |
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Seite x
... , 1896 238 240 244 247 Olney to Cleveland , March 6 , 1901 249 Heads of Proposed Treaty between Venezuela and Great Britain for Settlement of Venezuela Boundary Question , as agreed upon between Great Britain and X CONTENTS.
... , 1896 238 240 244 247 Olney to Cleveland , March 6 , 1901 249 Heads of Proposed Treaty between Venezuela and Great Britain for Settlement of Venezuela Boundary Question , as agreed upon between Great Britain and X CONTENTS.
Seite xi
... March 5 , 1896 Olney to Pauncefote , April 11 , 1896 251 254 254 254 258 Salisbury to Pauncefote , May 18 , 1896 265 Olney to Pauncefote , June 12 , 1896 271 Olney to Pauncefote , June 22 , 1896 272 Text of General Arbitration Treaty ...
... March 5 , 1896 Olney to Pauncefote , April 11 , 1896 251 254 254 254 258 Salisbury to Pauncefote , May 18 , 1896 265 Olney to Pauncefote , June 12 , 1896 271 Olney to Pauncefote , June 22 , 1896 272 Text of General Arbitration Treaty ...
Seite 7
... March.1 When the news of this selection got about , most of the country asked , Who is Olney ? The newspapers began to be humorous about the impossibility of obtaining a photo- graph . They sought interviews in vain , and published ...
... March.1 When the news of this selection got about , most of the country asked , Who is Olney ? The newspapers began to be humorous about the impossibility of obtaining a photo- graph . They sought interviews in vain , and published ...
Seite 25
... March and the regular session of Congress in the following December . That any special session of Congress would be required on account of the currency or because purchases of silver under the Sherman Law threatened to bring the country ...
... March and the regular session of Congress in the following December . That any special session of Congress would be required on account of the currency or because purchases of silver under the Sherman Law threatened to bring the country ...
Seite 36
... persons actually started on the march for Washington .... They sympa- thized with the Coxey movement , not from conviction , it 1 Peck , 373 . is believed , but because they were poor and suffering LABOR TROUBLES AND THE COXEYITES.
... persons actually started on the march for Washington .... They sympa- thized with the Coxey movement , not from conviction , it 1 Peck , 373 . is believed , but because they were poor and suffering LABOR TROUBLES AND THE COXEYITES.
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
accepted action Administration affairs American Appendix arbitral tribunal arbitration treaty Article Attorney-General award Bayard Boston boundary dispute Britain British British Guiana Cabinet called Chicago strike Cleveland Congress considered controversy course Cuba Cuban Debs decision Democratic desire diplomatic discussion dispatch District draft Dupuy de Lome England fact favor force Foreign Relations Gray Gables Gresham Guiana insurgents interest international law involved Island issue Judge labor letter Liliuokalani Lord Playfair Lord Salisbury Majesty's Government matter ment Minister Monroe Doctrine national honor negotiations never Olney Coll Olney's opinion party Pauncefote political practical present President presidential proposed Queen question R. H. Dana railroad reason referred regarded reply Republican respect result RICHARD OLNEY Salisbury's Schomburgk line Secretary seems Senate settled settlement Sir Julian Spain Spanish Stevens Government suggestion Supreme Court territorial claims things tion troops United Venezuela Venezuelan boundary Washington
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 120 - When such report is made and accepted it will, in my opinion, be the duty of the United States to resist by every means in its power as a wilful aggression upon its rights and interests the appropriation by Great Britain of any lands or the exercise of governmental jurisdiction over any territory which after investigation we have determined of right belongs to Venezuela.
Seite 117 - Venezuela to large tracts of territory which from their auriferous nature are known to be of almost untold value. But they cannot consent to entertain, or to submit to the arbitration of another Power or of foreign jurists, however eminent, claims based on the extravagant pretensions of Spanish officials in the last century, and involving the transfer of large numbers of. British subjects, who have for many years enjoyed the settled rule of a British Colony...
Seite 108 - The rule in question has but a single purpose and object. It is that no European power or combination of European powers shall forcibly deprive an American state of the right and power of self-government and of shaping for itself its own political fortunes and destinies.
Seite 109 - To-day the United States is practically sovereign on this continent, and its fiat is law upon the subjects to which it confines its interposition.
Seite 253 - ... (c) In determining the boundary line, if territory of one party be found by the tribunal to have been at the date of this treaty in the occupation of the subjects or citizens of the other party, such effect shall be given to such occupation as reason, justice, the principles of international law, and the equities of the case shall, in the opinion of the tribunal, require.
Seite 107 - That America is in no part open to colonization, though the proposition was not universally admitted at the time of its first enunciation, has long been universally conceded. We are now concerned, therefore, only with that other practical application of the Monroe doctrine, the disregard of which by an European power is to be deemed an act of unfriendliness towards the United States.
Seite 51 - On presentation of it to the court an injunction was ordered commanding the defendants " and all persons combining and conspiring with them, and all other persons whomsoever, absolutely to desist and refrain from in any way or manner interfering with, hindering, obstructing or stopping...
Seite 107 - Venezuela, by constantly urging and promoting the restoration of diplomatic relations between the two countries, by pressing for arbitration of the disputed boundary, by offering to act as arbitrator, by expressing its grave concern whenever new alleged instances of British aggression upon Venezuelan territory have been brought to its notice, the...
Seite 252 - In deciding the matters submitted to the Arbitrators they shall be governed by the following three rules, which are agreed upon by the High Contracting Parties as rules to be taken as applicable to the case...
Seite 101 - The boundary of British Guiana still remains in dispute between Great Britain and Venezuela. Believing that its early settlement, on some just basis alike honorable to both parties, is in the line of our established policy to remove from this hemisphere all causes of difference with powers...